Invisible Victims: White Males and the Crisis of Affirmative Action

Invisible Victims: White Males and the Crisis of Affirmative Action

ISBN-10:
0313264961
ISBN-13:
9780313264962
Pub. Date:
12/11/1989
Publisher:
Bloomsbury Academic
ISBN-10:
0313264961
ISBN-13:
9780313264962
Pub. Date:
12/11/1989
Publisher:
Bloomsbury Academic
Invisible Victims: White Males and the Crisis of Affirmative Action

Invisible Victims: White Males and the Crisis of Affirmative Action

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Overview

Lynch's passionately argued book asks: How did controversial social policy that lacked public support nonetheless become institutionalized? The social policy Lynch examines is affirmative action. . . . Lynch condemns the sloppy, fearful thinking that has converted affirmative action into quotas and that has kept social researchers shying away from this explosive topic. Choice

Anyone interested in race relations and sex roles in the United States must read this book.
Social Forces

More and more questions have surfaced in the past decade concerning the wisdom and fairness of affirmative action programs. In this book, Lynch takes a hard look at affirmative action policy development and the social and ethical implications of a system that promotes gender and race as criteria for vocational advancement and educational opportunity. He focuses on the experiences of white males who have been victims of reverse discrimination under such programs and explores the lackluster response from government, the media, and employing institutions. Lynch examines the political taboo that for two decades effectively stifled discussion of the issues that affirmative action raises in both public discourse and scholarly analysis. He reviews the original ideals and purposes of affirmative action and contrasts them with the program as it has actually operated in everyday work settings. In case studies based on interviews and other data, Lynch assesses the reactions of white males to affirmative action barriers, as well as their impact on co-workers, friends, and relatives. He describes the role of the mass media, the social sciences, and ideological elites in creating a conspiracy of silence concerning the hidden and unintended consequences of affirmative action policies. The only study that deals specifically with the impact of affirmative action on white males, this book will appeal to academic and general readers with an interest in public policy, law, political science, sociology, and social psychology.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780313264962
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 12/11/1989
Series: Controversies in Science , #80
Pages: 253
Sales rank: 226,635
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x 0.62(d)

About the Author

FREDERICK R. LYNCH is Senior Research Associate at the Salvatori Center, Claremont McKenna College in Claremont, CA. He is the author of numerous articles on affirmative action and other social issues in scholarly jourbanals and popular publications, including

Table of Contents

Introduction: Social Policy by Steamroller
Affirmative Action: Legal History and Public Opinion
An Affirmative Action Sampler
Invisible Victims: Individual Reactions
Invisible Victims: Reactions of Co-Workers, Friends, and Relatives
Invisible Victims: Institutional Responses
Affirmative Action and the Mass Media
The Spiral of Silence and the New McCarthyism
Affirmative Action, the University, and Sociology
Elite Accommodation and the Flaws of Affirmative Action
Manifest Consequences of Affirmative Action
Restructuring Society by Race and Gender: Latent Functions of Affirmative Action
Appendixes
Index

What People are Saying About This

William Beer

Anyone seriously interested in race relations and sex roles in the United States must read this book.

Joseph Adelson

This excellent book is about real rather than potential victims, those who have suffered directly because racial preferences have disrupted or ended their careers. It is quite right to term them invisible . . . . They are ordinary citizens, done in by their betters, swept aside coolly yet self-righteously in the service of a regnant cliche of the moment.

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